Persistent Intrathecal Immune Activation in HIV-1-Infected Individuals on Antiretroviral Therapy

Abstract
Neopterin is a well-established marker of macrophage activation. The cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) neopterin levels are elevated in most HIV-1-infected individuals and decrease significantly after initiation of antiretroviral therapy (ART). Unexpectedly, CSF concentrations often remain mildly abnormal even in patients treated for a long time with suppressive ART. The aims of this study were to analyze if persistently elevated CSF neopterin levels were associated with the type of antiretroviral regimen or with low-level CSF HIV-1 concentrations and to evaluate if plasma HIV-1 RNA levels correlated to lingering CSF neopterin concentrations in patients with effective ART. One hundred fifty-seven chronically HIV-1-infected patients with stable ART for ≥6 months and no neurologic symptoms were included, and 193 HIV-1-infected patients without ART served as controls. Neopterin was analyzed with a radioimmunoassay or an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. HIV-1 RNA quantification was performed with the Roche Amplicor assay (version 1.5; Hoffman-La Roche, Basel, Switzerland). Two quantitative HIV-1 RNA assays with sensitivities ≤2.5 copies/mL were used in 40 samples. As anticipated, HIV-1 RNA and CSF neopterin levels were markedly lower in patients on ART compared with untreated controls. No significant difference in CSF neopterin concentrations was found between those treated with protease inhibitor- and nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor-based regimens in combination with 2 nucleoside analogues. Subjects with CSF HIV-1 RNA loads The persistent intrathecal cell-mediated immune response was associated with CSF viral load but not with treatment regimen in individuals on ART.